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President Donald Trump said Tuesday he still likes ‘Elon a lot,’ despite their high-profile split earlier this year over the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

At the end of the administration’s monthly Cabinet meeting, FOX Business’ Edward Lawrence asked Trump whether Musk was ‘back in [his] circle of friends’ after their falling-out.

Trump responded:Well, I really don’t know. I mean, I like Elon a lot.’ He praised Musk’s endorsement during the 2024 campaign before noting their disagreement over electric-vehicle policy.

Musk was a fixture in the White House in the early days of the second Trump administration as he took on the role as the Department of Government Efficiency’s de facto leader. He served as a special government employee with the Trump administration to help lead DOGE, frequently attending Cabinet meetings and joining Trump during public events. Musk’s tenure with DOGE wrapped up at the end of May. 

Musk had also championed Trump during the 2024 election cycle, criss-crossing battleground states that ultimately all voted for the Republican candidate over former Vice President Kamala Harris. 

Trump repeatedly celebrated Musk for his efforts at DOGE to remove potential federal overspending, fraud and mismanagement – an effort assailed by government employees and Democrats who protested both the Trump administration and Musk repeatedly earlier this year. 

The cozy friendship fell to pieces in June, however, when Musk began publicly ridiculing the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill,’ which was a massive piece of legislation Trump signed into law in July that advances his agenda on taxes, immigration, energy, defense and the national debt. 

Musk railed against the legislation, which Trump had been rallying Republican lawmakers to pass since the beginning of his second term, posting on X that it would be the ‘BIGGEST DEBT ceiling increase in HISTORY’ and also claimed in a personal attack on Trump that ‘@RealDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files.’ 

Trump previously told the media that his relationship with Musk changed when he began discussing plans to eliminate the electic vehicle mandate, which would affect Musk’s signature electric company, Tesla. Trump signed a trio of congressional resolutions in June ending California’s restrictive rules for diesel engines and mandates on electric vehicle sales, with Trump celebrating that his signature ‘will kill the California mandates forever.’

The pair abruptly parted ways in June, with Musk weeks later offering some support to Trump’s presidential actions on social media, such as praising a ceasefire deal between Israel and Gaza in July.

Musk was seen physically back in Trump’s orbit in September during the memorial service for Charlie Kirk, Turning Point USA’s founder who was assassinated on Sept. 10. The pair was seen sitting next to each other and chatting during the ceremony. 

Musk most recently attended a Trump event on Nov. 18 at the White House for a dinner with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia, as well as dozens of high-profile business leaders. 

Trump’s latest remarks on Musk unfolded during his Cabinet meeting, which marked his ninth such meeting since the start of his second administration and matched the total number of full Cabinet meetings former President Joe Biden held across his four-year tenure. 

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Senate Republicans are divided on their view of the deadly Sept. 2 strikes in the Caribbean as congressional inquiries into the matter mount, with some arguing that subduing suspected drug boats is the right move while others question the legality of the so-called double-tap attacks.

The Senate and House Armed Services committees are gearing up for hearings into the strikes after reports that Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, later confirmed by the White House, authorized a second strike to eliminate survivors on a suspected drug boat in the Caribbean.

But there is a growing tension among Republicans over what to do. Some support the desire of Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker, R-Miss., for stringent oversight of the incident, while others see the strikes as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on drugs flowing into the country.

Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, told Fox News Digital he was ‘very, very, very supportive of killing drug dealers. I think the more narco-terrorists that we kill, that we save American lives.’

‘I’m not concerned about killing people whose intent was to kill Americans at all,’ Moreno said.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed that Hegseth gave the green light for the second strike, but noted that it was Adm. Frank Bradley, the head of U.S. Special Operations Command, who ordered and directed it.

That confirmation came after a report from The Washington Post claimed Hegseth had ordered to ‘kill them all,’ which some on the Hill have disputed.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said he read the article and charged that there ‘wasn’t an exact quote from Secretary Hegseth. There was an anonymous source paraphrased what the secretary allegedly said.’

‘So, here we’ve got a story in The Washington Post, which is known to hate Trump and Republicans, by a reporter who is citing an anonymous source that supposedly is saying that Hegseth said it before the strike even happened, but they don’t know exactly what he said,’ Kennedy said. ‘That is a waste of your time and mine.’

When pressed about Leavitt’s confirmation of the authorization, Kennedy said, ‘I don’t care what the White House press secretary said.’

Still, some Republicans want answers to what exactly happened.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., reiterated that he believed that the Senate and House Armed Services committees’ impending probes into the matter was a ‘natural place’ to look at what happened with the strikes, but he stopped short of weighing in on whether a second strike was right or wrong. 

Well, I don’t know the particulars yet, and that’s why we’re gonna have the — we’ll look,’ Thune said. 

Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said that since the report came out, ‘We want to get to the facts.’

‘Obviously, if there was a direction to take a second shot and kill people, that’s a violation of an ethical, moral or legal code,’ Tillis said. ‘We need to get to the bottom of it. But right now, it could be, I think, was it Oxford that the word of the year is ‘rage bait’? Could be rage bait too. So we want to get to the facts.’

Senate Democrats are demanding a fulsome dive into the incident, and toeing the line of whether what transpired was a war crime.

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he expected to have a briefing with Bradley this week.

When asked what questions he wanted to be answered, Reed said the top priority was to find out whether the strikes comported with ‘the law of war and [Uniform Code of Military Justice] and international law.’

‘I think one of the easiest ways to begin to dispel the question is to make public the video of the strikes,’ Reed said.

Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., has, time and again this Congress, remained a staunch critic of action taken in Iran and in the Caribbean and moved to curtail the administration’s actions through resolutions that would stymie President Donald Trump’s war powers.

He said lawmakers needed to get to the bottom of ‘whether a war crime has been committed.’

Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., was cautious not to fully paint the incident as a war crime before getting more facts, adding that he hoped the reports of the strikes were ‘not accurate.’

‘I will say, though you know as somebody who has sunk two ships myself, that folks in the military need to understand, you know, the law of the sea, the Geneva Conventions, what the law says,’ Kelly said. ‘And I’m concerned that if there were, in fact, as reported, you know, survivors clinging to a damaged vessel, that could be, you know, over a line. I hope it’s not the case.’

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The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is seeking to reform the funding structure for presidential libraries in an effort to reduce reliance on taxpayer funding for operational costs and allow NARA to focus more on preserving and providing access to records. 

Fourteen presidential libraries fall under the National Archives system, and that number is expected to jump to 16 for presidential libraries dedicated to Trump and former President Joe Biden. 

While NARA and the presidential foundations have their own individual agreements outlining cost-sharing burdens for these presidential libraries, taxpayer funding is going toward maintenance costs, including mowing lawns, painting walls and cleaning toilets at nearly all these buildings, according to NARA. 

Additionally, the government contracting process for quick repairs like broken door hinges filters through an approval process in Washington and can take weeks or months to be addressed, the agency said. 

As a result, NARA is in the process of negotiating with each presidential foundation on an individual basis so they can take greater ownership of the operational responsibilities for their specific library, Jim Byron, senior advisor to the archivist, told Fox News Digital.

‘Despite decades of well-intentioned oversight and stewardship of America’s presidential libraries by the National Archives, reality now dictates that operational changes can and should be made to ensure the long-term health of these American treasures,’ Byron said in a statement to Fox News Digital Monday. 

‘Presidential libraries have grown in scope and purpose, and with that growth — and with anticipated future additions to the system — comes increased expenditures to be borne by the American taxpayers.’ 

NARA spends $91 million annually on presidential libraries from appropriations, and the deferred maintenance costs across the entire library system total roughly $123 million. 

Under current negotiations that launched in the spring between NARA and the presidential foundations, shifting some of the costs to the presidential foundations is expected to save NARA $27 million. These funds will then be shifted toward NARA’s primary mission of preserving and sharing records, including digitizing and releasing more files, Byron said.

In the event that changes aren’t made to shift more operational costs to presidential foundations, NARA’s ability to focus on its mission will be jeopardized, according to Byron. 

‘The alternative is to do nothing and allow NARA’s appropriations to go to lawn care and toilet cleaning at the expense of FOIA processing, to close all presidential libraries when the government shuts down, to allow a deferred maintenance backlog to grow and to regret that presidential library structures were not addressed,’ Byron said. ‘The National Archives is committed to making sure that doesn’t happen while delivering for the American people.’

Luke Nichter, a history professor at Chapman University who said he averages 100 days annually for research and interviews with former government officials, told Fox News Digital that, given the constraints of the federal budget, it’s necessary for presidential foundations to shoulder more of the cost for upkeep of these presidential libraries.

‘It now takes about as much money to build a presidential library as it does to run for president — about a billion dollars,’ Nichter said in an email to Fox News Digital Tuesday. ‘The American taxpayer should not bear that. The administration deserves credit for starting an important conversation about the future of these cherished institutions.

‘In the future, the National Archives will have to focus more closely on what it does well — the preservation of federal and presidential records — and leave other functions to the presidential foundations.’ 

This most recent effort aligns with other initiatives underway at the National Archives aimed at redirecting efforts to the agency’s mission, including working with other agencies to release the John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., and Amelia Earhart files. 

The presidential library structure varies, and NARA and each presidential foundation have their own separate public-private agreements. Typically, though, private funds are used to create a presidential library, which NARA then oversees using federal funding.

But this isn’t always the case. For example, the Obama Foundation is an entirely private entity and did not choose to construct a library for NARA to store documents, instead opting to build a private presidential center and private museum. As a result, NARA digitized and stored Obama presidential records at an existing NARA site and still oversees preserving and providing access to those records. 

Previous efforts to revamp the funding partnership between government and private entities successfully occurred in 2018, when NARA coordinated with each presidential foundation to discuss which operations it could take on amid increased budget constraints. Ultimately, those negotiations led to NARA and the George W. Bush Foundation securing a new deal splitting operational costs. 

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Secretary of War Pete Hegseth chastised the press following media reports that he signed off on a second strike against an alleged drug boat after the first one left survivors. 

The Trump administration has come under renewed scrutiny for its strikes in the Caribbean targeting alleged drug smugglers, after the Washington Post reported on Friday that Hegseth verbally ordered everyone onboard the alleged drug boat to be killed in a Sept. 2 operation. The Post reported that a second strike was conducted to take out the remaining survivors on the boat. 

On Monday, the White House confirmed that a second strike had occurred, but disputed that Hegseth ever gave an initial order to ensure that everyone on board was killed, when asked specifically about Hegseth’s instructions.

Hegseth said that he watched the first strike live, but did not see any survivors at that time amid the fire and the smoke — and blasted the press for their reporting.

‘This is called the fog of war. This is what you in the press don’t understand,’ Hegseth told reporters at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday. ‘You sit in your air-conditioned offices or up on Capitol Hill and you nit pick, and you plant fake stories in the Washington Post about ‘kill everybody’ phrases on anonymous sources not based in anything, not based in any truth at all. And then you want to throw out really irresponsible terms about American heroes, about the judgment that they made.’ 

Hegseth said that after watching the first strike, he left for a meeting and later learned of the second strike. The White House said Monday that Hegseth had authorized Adm. Frank ‘Mitch’ Bradley to conduct the strikes, and that Bradley was the one who ordered and directed the second one. 

At the time of the Sept. 2 strike, Bradley was serving as the commander of Joint Special Operations Command, which falls under U.S. Special Operations Command. He is now the head of U.S. Special Operations Command.

According to Hegseth, carrying out a subsequent strike on the alleged drug boat was the right call. 

‘Admiral Bradley made the correct decision to ultimately sink the boat and eliminate the threat,’ Hegseth said Tuesday. 

Meanwhile, reports of the second strike have attracted even more scrutiny from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle on Capitol Hill and calls for greater oversight, amid questions about the strikes’ legality. 

‘This committee is committed to providing rigorous oversight of the Department of Defense’s military operations in the Caribbean,’ Reps. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., and Adam Smith, D-Wash., who lead the House Armed Services Committee, said in a statement on Saturday. ‘We take seriously the reports of follow-on strikes on boats alleged to be ferrying narcotics in the SOUTHCOM region and are taking bipartisan action to gather a full accounting of the operation in question.’

Hegseth said Tuesday that although there has been a pause in strikes in the Caribbean because alleged drug boats are becoming harder to find, the Trump administration’s campaign against the influx of drugs will continue. 

‘We’ve only just begun striking narco-boats and putting narco-terrorists at the bottom of the ocean because they’ve been poisoning the American people,’ Hegseth said. 

The Trump administration has carried out more than 20 strikes against alleged drug boats in Latin American waters, and has bolstered its military presence in the Caribbean to align with Trump’s goal to crack down on the influx of drugs into the U.S.

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Could Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo be spending his last few months in Milwaukee?

Anything is possible, seeing as the Mavericks shipped Luka Doncic to the Lakers in a blockbuster trade last February, and if things continue the way they have in Brew City, Antetokounmpo very well might be the next NBA star setting up shop elsewhere.

It seems as though eagle-eyed Bucks fans, who are either passionate about their team or just plain nosy with nothing better to do, noticed that Antetokounmpo recently purged his social media accounts of anything related to the Bucks, save for some NBA Cup and NBA Finals-associated posts.

Since winning that championship in 2022, the Bucks haven’t gotten past the conference semifinals during the playoffs, including three consecutive first-round exits.

Milwaukee, thought to be a contender in the Eastern Conference, now sits at 9-13, good for 11th place after blowing a 16-point third-quarter lead and suffering an embarrassing 129-126 loss to the 3-16 Washington Wizards on Monday.

The Feb. 5 trade deadline is likely to loom large if things don’t get better, as Antetokounmpo, who turns 31 on Dec. 6, is making $54 million this season, and is on the books for $58 million for 2026-27 before a $62 million player option has to be decided on in the summer of 2027.

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Jury selection will begin May 4 in the trial of Cleveland Guardians pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis L. Ortiz, who each face up to 65 years in prison for their alleged roles in a gambling scheme.

Both pitchers have entered not guilty pleas to charges of wire fraud conspiracy, honest services wire fraud conspiracy, conspiracy to influence sporting contests by bribery and money laundering conspiracy.

A 23-page indictment alleges the pitchers colluded with bettors, promising to throw balls in predetermined situations to win money on microbets. The pitchers remain on Major League Baseball’s restricted list and could be subject to placement on the league’s permanently ineligible list or other discipline based on the trial’s outcome.

U.S. District Court Judge Kiyo Matsumoto indicated the trial could begin in the days or weeks after jury selection commences; the pitchers are due next in court Jan. 15.

The indictment alleges that Clase, a three-time All-Star and two-time winner of the American League’s Reliever of the Year award, began interacting with the gamblers in May 2023. Ortiz, acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates in December 2024, joined the alleged scheme this past June.

Prosecutors allege bettors won at least $450,000 from pitches thrown by Clase and Ortiz.

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It’s quite possible Sonny Gray spends just one season in the Boston Red Sox rotation. He’s apparently set on making the most of it – and that includes taking shots at their archrivals.

Gray expressed his disdain for the New York Yankees in an introductory video news conference with the Boston media Dec. 2, telling the virtually assembled throng: ‘It feels good to me to go to a place where it’s easy to hate the Yankees.’

That will certainly perk up some ears in the Bronx, where Gray spent half of the 2017 and all the 2018 season after a trade from the Oakland Athletics to the Yankees.

He posted a 4.51 ERA over 56 games – nearly a full run worse than his career 3.58 mark – and lost his rotation spot in 2018, feeding the trope that certain players struggle in the game’s biggest market.

Gray noted that he ‘never wanted to go in the first place’ to New York after dominating in Oakland’s pitcher-friendly park.

Gray regained his footing in 2019 after a trade to Cincinnati, earning his second of three All-Star nods, and flourished in Minnesota and St. Louis, where he signed a three-year, $75 million deal.

The retooling Cardinals dealt him and $20 million in cash to Boston, helping cover his $35 million salary this season; there’s a $31 million mutual option for 2027.

That decision will come after what should be a 2026 campaign that spices up the doddering Red Sox-Yankees rivalry. The teams met in the AL wild card series in October and the Yankees prevailed in a decisive Game 3 behind Walpole, Mass. flamethrower Cam Schlittler, who left no doubt he had no love for fans in his native New England.

They’d apparently talked a little too much smack before the winner-take-all game – and Schlittler responded with 12 strikeouts over eight innings and a verbal volley from a champagne-soaked clubhouse.

‘We’re aggressive back home and we’re going to try to get under people’s skins,’ he said. ‘They just picked the wrong guy to do it to. And the wrong team to do it to.’

Add Gray, a thoughtful Tennessean, to the mix. He donned a retro Red Sox World Series cap for his Zoom and noted his affection for the Red Sox goes back to playing for Tim Corbin, a fan of the club, at Vanderbilt.

Now, he’ll get his first taste of arguably the game’s finest rivalry, perhaps in the teams’ first series at Fenway Park, April 21-23. They don’t hit Yankee Stadium until June 5, which seems a long ways away as snow piles up around the country.

Yankee fans probably won’t forget.

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Rosie O’Donnell says her daughter is holding President Donald Trump personally responsible for their relocation to Ireland and for what she sees as his broader damage to the country.

‘My daughter is now saying, ‘Damn him. Damn Trump,’’ O’Donnell said during an appearance on ‘The Jim Acosta Show.’

She recalled her daughter pounding on a table in anger and stating, ‘He made us move for our own safety … and now he’s destroying the country.’ 

O’Donnell acknowledged the challenge of shielding her child from political upheaval while still confronting the realities of their situation.

‘She lives here. She hears what I’m saying to you,’ O’Donnell said, explaining that her daughter ‘recognizes what’s going on.’ 

The comedian also emphasized, ‘Of me thinking that I have to somehow stand in defiance of him. No, no … I don’t. Somebody can tap me out, you know. Yeah. I did 22 years. I don’t really need to do any more. And I don’t want my kid to be so affected by it.’

Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House for comment.

O’Donnell’s relocated to Ireland after Trump threatened to strip her of U.S. citizenship.

In October, she announced she was applying for Irish citizenship, citing her grandparents’ roots and a self-described ‘self-imposed (political exile)’ in Ireland.

In an interview with the U.K.’s Daily Telegraph, the 63-year-old said, ‘I am applying and about to be approved for my Irish citizenship as my grandparents were from there, and that’s all you need. It will be good to have my Irish citizenship, especially since Trump keeps threatening to take away mine.’

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson reacted at the time, telling Fox News Digital, ‘What great news for America!’

O’Donnell revealed her international move in March, sharing that she’d relocated to Ireland just five days before President Trump’s 2025 inauguration. 

Sharing the news with her TikTok followers, she called the transition ‘pretty wonderful.’

The feud between O’Donnell and Trump flared again in July, when he took to Truth Social, warning he was considering stripping the comedian of her U.S. citizenship.

‘Because of the fact that Rosie O’Donnell is not in the best interests of our Great Country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her Citizenship,’ he wrote. ‘She is a Threat to Humanity, and should remain in the wonderful Country of Ireland, if they want her. GOD BLESS AMERICA!’

O’Donnell fired back on social media, asserting that Trump ‘has always hated the fact that i see him for who he is.’

Under the United States Constitution, a president does not have the power to strip the citizenship of someone born in the country, meaning since O’Donnell was born in New York, her citizenship is protected by the 14th Amendment.

The tensions between the two go back nearly two decades, beginning in 2006 when O’Donnell criticized Trump while co-hosting ‘The View.’

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Russian President Vladimir Putin ratcheted up tensions with Europe on Tuesday, warning that if the bloc sparked a war with Russia, Moscow was prepared to meet it.

Putin also blasted European leaders, accusing them of sabotaging U.S.-led efforts to end the nearly four-year-old war in Ukraine.

‘But if Europe suddenly wants to wage a war with us and starts it, we are ready right away. There can be no doubt about that,’ Putin said, according to The Associated Press.

Putin was responding to a question about Russian media reports that Hungary’s foreign minister warned Europe was preparing for war with Russia. Putin insisted, as he has for years, that Moscow does not seek a war with European nations.

The Russian president made the remarks after speaking at an investment forum and before meeting in the Kremlin with a U.S. delegation led by envoy Steve Witkoff and President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

It’s not the first time Putin has warned Europe about meddling in the war.

In October, Putin warned that Europe would face a ‘significant response’ if it continued supplying military aid to Ukraine, and he made similar threats in May.

In February 2024, Putin warned that Western military intervention against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could result in nuclear escalation — a statement widely interpreted as a warning to Europe and Western allies.

Putin claimed on Tuesday that European leaders introduced ‘demands that are absolutely unacceptable to Russia’ that effectively ‘blocked the entire peace process.’ He accused them of doing so cynically in order to blame Moscow for rejecting peace.

European leaders have maintained that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is a stepping stone to a wider war with the 27-nation European Union, which has poured billions of dollars into supporting Kyiv.

Putin said European powers had locked themselves out of peace talks on Ukraine because they cut off contacts with Moscow.

‘They are on the side of war,’ Putin said.

He also suggested the conflict in Ukraine was not a full-blown war, describing Russia’s actions as ‘surgical’ — a restraint, he said, that would not apply in a direct confrontation with European powers, according to Reuters. 

Putin’s comments come as Witkoff and Kushner press for peace between Ukraine and Russia.

On Sunday, Witkoff — a central figure in negotiating the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas — joined Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Kushner in Florida to meet with Ukrainian negotiators. Rubio described the meeting as ‘very productive.’ In a statement, Rubio said the goal is ‘not just the end of the war.’

Last week, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov warned that Moscow could reject the White House’s peace framework if it does not uphold the ‘spirit and letter’ of what Trump and Putin agreed to at the Alaska summit in August. He said that if the ‘key understandings’ were watered down, the situation would become ‘fundamentally different.’

Despite Lavrov’s comments, Putin showed interest in Trump’s effort to end the war, calling the drafted plan a starting point. 

‘We need to sit down and discuss this seriously,’ Putin told reporters, according to the AP.

He characterized Trump’s plan as ‘a set of issues put forward for discussion,’ rather than a draft agreement.

Fox News’ Andrea Margolis, Sarah Tobianski, Kyle Schmidbauer and Ashley Carnahan as well as The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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House appropriators and foreign affairs leaders convened a rare joint briefing Tuesday as part of a broader congressional investigation into what lawmakers and experts describe as escalating and targeted violence against Christians in Nigeria.

The session — led by House Appropriations Vice Chair and National Security Subcommittee Chairman Mario Díaz-Balart, R-Fla. — is feeding into a comprehensive report ordered by President Trump on recent massacres of Nigerian Christians and potential policy steps the U.S. could take to pressure Abuja to respond.

Trump directed Congress, led by Reps. Riley Moore, R-W.Va., and Appropriations Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., to probe Christian persecution in Nigeria and produce a report for the White House to review. He has floated the idea of taking direct military action against Islamists who kill. 

Vicky Hartzler, chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, told lawmakers that ‘religious freedom [is] under siege,’ citing the abduction of more than 300 children and attacks in which ‘radical Muslims kill entire Christian villages [and] burn churches.’ She said violations are ‘rampant,’ ‘violent,’ and disproportionately affect Christians, who she argued are targeted ‘at a 2.2 to 1 rate’ compared with Muslims.

Hartzler said Nigeria has taken some initial corrective steps — including reassigning about 100,000 police officers from VIP protection details — but warned the country is entering a ‘coordinated and deeply troubling period of escalated violence.’ She recommended targeted sanctions on Nigerian officials ‘who have demonstrated complicity,’ visa restrictions, blocking U.S.-based assets, and conditioning foreign and humanitarian aid on measurable accountability.

She also urged Congress to direct the Government Accountability Office to conduct a review of past U.S. assistance and said Abuja should retake villages seized from Christian farming communities so widows and children can return home.

Dr. Ebenezer Obadare of the Council on Foreign Relations offered the sharpest challenge to the Nigerian government’s claim that the violence is not religiously motivated. He said the idea Boko Haram and other militant groups target Christians and Muslims equally is a ‘myth,’ arguing the groups ‘act for one reason and one reason only: religion.’ Any higher Muslim casualty count, he said, reflects geography, not equal targeting.

Obadare described Boko Haram as fundamentally opposed to democracy and said the Nigerian military is ‘too corrupt and incompetent’ to dismantle jihadist networks without strong external pressure. He urged the U.S. to press the Nigerian government to disband armed groups enforcing Islamic law, confront corruption inside the security forces, and demonstrate genuine intent to curb religious violence. He added that Washington should insist Nigerian officials respond immediately to early warnings of impending attacks.

Sean Nelson of Alliance Defending Freedom International added that Nigeria is ‘the deadliest country in the world for Christians,’ claiming more Christians are killed there than in all other countries combined and at a rate ‘five times’ higher than Muslims when adjusted for population. He said extremists also target Muslims who refuse to embrace their extreme ideology, which he argued further undercuts Abuja’s narrative that the crisis is driven mainly by criminality or local disputes.

With a population of more than 230 million, Nigeria’s vibrant and often turbulent cities and villages are home to people of strikingly diverse backgrounds. The nation’s roughly 120 million-strong Muslim population dominates the north, while some 90 million Christians are centered in the southern half of the country.

Nelson urged tighter U.S. oversight of assistance to Nigeria, including routing some aid through faith-based organizations to avoid corruption. He called for greater transparency in how Abuja handles mass kidnappings and ransom payments and said sustained U.S. and international pressure is essential because ‘without transparency and outside pressure, nothing changes.’

Díaz-Balart criticized the Biden administration for reversing the Trump administration’s designation of Nigeria as a ‘country of particular concern’ in 2021, arguing the change has had ‘clearly deadly consequences.’ Lawmakers on the Appropriations, Foreign Affairs and Financial Services committees signaled additional oversight actions in the months ahead as they prepare the Trump-directed report to Congress.

Hartzler noted that Nigeria has recently begun taking several steps that could signal a shift toward confronting the crisis more directly. She pointed to President Bola Tinubu’s decision to pull about 100,000 police officers from VIP bodyguard assignments and redistribute them across the country, calling it ‘a promising start after years of neglect.’ She said the move reflects growing recognition inside Nigeria’s political leadership that the violence has reached an intolerable level.

She also highlighted comments last week from Nigeria’s speaker of the House, who acknowledged the country is facing a ‘coordinated and deeply troubling period of escalated violence.’ Hartzler said that acknowledgment — coupled with a push from the Nigerian House majority leader for more intensive legislative oversight — suggests the government may finally be admitting the scale and severity of the attacks.

Even with these developments, Hartzler warned the measures are far from sufficient. She emphasized that the Nigerian government must show clear intent to ‘quell injustice,’ act quickly when early warning signs of attacks appear, and commit to transparency and accountability if the recent steps are going to amount to meaningful progress.

The Nigerian Embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

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